Does anyone else use Mendeley? I’ve only recently begun to use it for citation organization — would love to meet any power users who can show me more Mendeley magic.
Libraries Supporting Digital Humanities
Session Idea: Creating collaborative digital editions as part of undergraduate coursework
I’m interested in creating digital editions collaboratively in the classroom, having students work on mapping places, linking the text to referenced works, providing images, explanations of rhetorical devices used… Visualizations based on text mining would be amazing, too.
I’d love to hear ideas and insight from others interested in this kind of thing.
Collaboration, Archives, and E-textbooks
From Roger Panetta:
- What are the best platforms for developing semester-long collaborative class projects?
- What are the best ways to engage the public in the development and use of archives?
- For an interdisciplinary history of the Hudson River, what are some models of a multimedia e-textbook?
1. Student Digital Projects
Find a consistent and effective platform for the development of semester long collaborative class projects.
Upgrade the organization and programming to develop projects that are more fully digital.
Review past projects to establish a base line for moving forward in a more dynamic format.
See the following
Hudson-Fulton Celebration 1909
SS Normandie: Paris and New York
Lincoln Center and Lincoln Square
2. Discuss the state of eArchives and ways to engage the public in their use and development.
See DigitalHudson
3. Models and support for the creation of an eText for an interdisciplinary history of the Hudson River.
Session idea: DH-enabled research assignments
I’m interested in discussing a topic that dovetails nicely into sessions that others have proposed: exploring DH-enabled alternatives to the long-form researched argument in undergraduate courses. In a Spring course (cross-listed as English and Environmental Studies) I’ll be working with my upper-division students on a wiki and a handmade book. Advice from those who have developed short- or medium-form research assignments using DH tools and platforms would be immensely helpful.
Working Session on Blogging Archives from the Classroom to the Community
How can blogs best be incorporated into the college classroom and can they build a bridge with the broader online community? Jane Carr and I have been considering this question while launching a new blog, Archive Notebook, where we share and write about our unused archival research in hopes of fostering productive discussion with other scholars. In the longer term, we aim to make this forum a pedagogic tool that will facilitate qualitative crowd-sourcing within and beyond the university, the institutional archive, and other traditional repositories. We are in the early stages of our own work on these topics and would love to share ideas about digital collecting, curating, and archiving as scholars and with students. We are currently using a Tumblr format but we welcome discussion of other tools and interfaces as well ideas on how to maximize engagement with formats like our own.
Topics might include:
- Thinking critically about the “commons” online – how to share public resources and participate in a collaborative cultural sphere
- Evaluating the efficacy of standard academic blogging practices within existing institutional frameworks
- Probing the line between documentation and analysis in digital writing. How can we — and our students — become skilled at the art of description as well as critical evaluation
- How we can build audiences and learn how to be better audiences online? What sorts of users tend to be rewarded within the digital commons?
- How can we continue to explore the relationship between the visual and the verbal? What exercises might facilitate various forms of new media literacy?
- How do we teach archive-related digital writing while remaining mindful of the distinction between material archives and born-digital data?
Proposing a general discussion: DH pedagogy
I agree that a general discussion on DH in the classroom, broadly under the concept of “DH pedagogy” would be useful. I would propose the following issues for discussion:
- Lesson plans and learning outcomes: incorporating DH in the classroom
- Student projects: ideas for structuring a realistic outcome
- Applications and tools: for both students and instructors
- Assessment: grading more than just content
- Resources: publications and community engagement, beyond just the tools
- The teaching environment: the classroom, the library, the lab
These are just a few basic things to start. I welcome any additions, suggestions, criticisms and comments.
UpComing Virtual Conference
Session Idea: pedagogical/curricular applications in digital humanities
I am very interested in a session that would be devoted to curricular applications of DH. I would very much like to hear short presentations from all who have used DH in the classroom, or from those who have ideas they have not yet implemented on using DH in the classroom. I have a theory that DH could potentially rejuvenate the liberal arts curriculum, bringing the humanities and the sciences closer together, and I would like very much to hear from others.
Dork Shorts!
Hi everyone – Tatiana clued me in to a great idea for a session proposal – “dork shorts” is a short series of 7-10 minute presentations of ideas or in progress projects that presenters is are interested in receiving feedback on or finding collaborators for (especially emphasizing ‘teachable moments’). I’d like to present on an Omeka project for rare books I’ve been involved with for the past year – looking to expand in terms of interactivity, visualizations, and eventually linked data. Anyone else interested in joining in for a Saturday session?